NKorea: US must alter 'hostile' policy
SEOUL, South Korea — North Korea said it will not give up its nuclear weapons until after the U.S. alters its "hostile policy" toward the North's government and proves it does not pose an atomic threat to the wartime rival.
The cryptic statement Tuesday from North Korea's Foreign Ministry is the first to lay out North Korea's nuclear stance since the last round of international talks on disarming the North in December.
Analysts say the statement _ issued a week before President-elect Barack Obama's inauguration _ also sends a strong signal that Pyongyang is keen to forge diplomatic relations with the next U.S. administration.
Stalinist North Korea, one of the world's most isolated countries, has never had diplomatic ties with Washington, which sent troops to back South Korea during the 1950-53 Korean War. Relations warmed under President Bill Clinton but went into a deep freeze when President George W. Bush took office with sharp words for the North.
Eight years later, Pyongyang appears eager to make amends, refraining from its customary New Year's Day diatribe against the U.S. and reportedly offering to send an envoy to Obama's Jan. 20 inauguration.
In the statement carried by the state-run Korean Central News Agency, North Korea's Foreign Ministry reiterated its commitment to a nuclear-free Korean peninsula. However, it said Washington cannot demand that Pyongyang bare its nuclear arsenal without revealing, and removing, its own alleged nuclear weapons in South Korea.
Seoul and Washington deny having a secret atomic arsenal. "We don't have nuclear weapons," South Korean Foreign Ministry spokesman Moon Tae-young said late Tuesday.
But the U.S. military does have some 28,000 troops in the South and holds regular war games with South Korean troops, exercises the North denounces as proof of U.S. aggression.
"We would never show our nuclear weapons first _ even in 100 years _ unless the U.S. hostile policy and nuclear threat to North Korea are terminated," said the statement, monitored in Seoul.
The ministry also suggested that a change in policy could convince Pyongyang to give up its nuclear ambitions.
"We won't need atomic weapons when U.S. nuclear threats are removed, and the U.S. nuclear umbrella over South Korea is gone," the statement said.
Regional powers have been trying for years to rid North Korea _ which tested a nuclear bomb in 2006 _ of its weapons.
The impoverished North agreed in 2007 to a six-nation pact promising aid in exchange for disarmament. However, the process has been stalled for months because of a standoff with Washington over how to verify Pyongyang's past nuclear activities.
North Korea said verification must take place at the last stage of the disarmament process _ not the second of three phases as the U.S. wants. And it said Washington must reveal its arsenal in South Korea at the same time.
"It is necessary to simultaneously verify the whole Korean peninsula," the statement said.
But the statement is less about nuclear weapons than it is about diplomacy, said Kim Yong-hyun, a North Korea expert at Seoul's Dongguk University.
"Ahead of Obama's inauguration, North Korea is strongly presenting its position that relations with the U.S. must be normalized before there can be any progress on the nuclear issue," he said. "North Korea wants to make it clear that the point is the relations with the U.S., not its nuclear weapons."
Obama has said he is open to direct talks and would be willing to meet with autocratic North Korean leader Kim Jong Il if it helps push the denuclearization process forward.
But State Department spokesman Sean McCormack said in Washington that "North Korea is going to have to move through the six-party process" first if it wants to establish relations with the U.S.
Kim, meanwhile, inspected machinery factories as part of his push to drive up North Korea's economy, KCNA reported Wednesday.
North Korea appears to be focusing on science and technology as part of a five-year plan that began last year to develop those fields, Unification Ministry spokesman Kim Ho-nyeon said in Seoul.
U.S. and South Korean officials say Kim, 66, suffered a stroke in August but reports in state-run media portray him as healthy and active. Officials say they cannot confirm the reports.
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Associated Press writer Jae-soon Chang contributed to this report.










JEAN H. LEE | January 13, 2009 11:32 PM EST |
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